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Third: Resulting from this domination of paid coaches is the difficulty of changing the game and giving it back to the players, for the rule-makers either are those same coaches or represent the groups or committees who engaged them, and who rely on their judgment. Therefore they will make no rules which would spoil their plays or "system" as it is called, which is their stock in trade...

Author: By A. M. Beale, (SPECIAL ARTICLE FOR THE CRIMSON) | Title: BEALE FLAYS FOOTBALL HEADS FOR FUMBLING PENALTY | 1/5/1921 | See Source »

Cambridge in its loneliness, for Oxford takes the other stand in this matter of admitting women within its portals, points to the United States as evidence of its good judgment. "We should like to see women with a greater university of their own," said Sir Geoffrey Butler, Fellow of Corpus Christi. "In America women are proud to have their own universities and would hate to have men hanging around." And he points to Radcliffe students as doing just this. "They would think it most unprogressive to form a little part of Harvard, for instance instead of founding their own tradition...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OLD AND NEW CAMBRIDGE | 12/11/1920 | See Source »

...more value than much arguing. The same genial spiral marks the discussion of such other matters as efficiency, genius, reconstruction, bolshevism, and what not. All this is both to say that we have here a volume of essays in the best tradition, marked by sympathy, quiet humor, and keen judgment, expressed in a style as nearly perfect as one could demand. "Every Man's Natural Desire" and "The Hibernation of Genius" are about as firm as anything we have in the field of English essays...

Author: By David T. Pottinger ., | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF - REVIEWS - JOTS AND TITLES | 12/11/1920 | See Source »

...late hour last night the CRIMSON, basing its judgment on an impartial investigation of the election, came to the conclusions offered elsewhere in the new columns. It based these upon a thorough examination and checking-up of the 304 original ballots cast, which were in the hands of the nominating committee; and which the latter turned over to it. The cry of "Fraud!" by a number of undergraduate alarmists was as inevitable as it was unfortunate. The CRIMSON found, however, absolutely no traces of dishonesty; it found distinct traces of gross carelessness in the counting of the ballots...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE SENIOR ELECTION | 12/11/1920 | See Source »

...Dean L. B. R. Briggs '75, Holworthy Hall, and Arthur Stanwood Pier '95 are to judge the submitted stories; Professor Irving Babbitt '89, Ellery Sedgwick '94 and William Roscoe Thayer '81 will choose the winning essay; while Conrad Aiken '11 and Professor J. L. Lowes, Ph.D. '03 will pass judgment upon the sonnets...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Select Judges for Advocate Contests | 11/27/1920 | See Source »

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